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Ghost of Christmas Present

The Ghost of Christmas Present is a fictional character in Charles Dickens' 1843 novella A Christmas Carol. The Ghost is one of three spirits which appear to miser Ebenezer Scrooge to offer him a chance of redemption.

Ghost of Christmas Present
A Christmas Carol character
The Ghost of Christmas Present and Ebenezer Scrooge - illustration by John Leech (1843).
Created byCharles Dickens
Alias
  • Spirit of Christmas Present
GenderMale[a]
OccupationSpirit of Christmas
Relatives

Following a visit from the ghost of his deceased business partner Jacob Marley, Scrooge receives nocturnal visits by three Ghosts of Christmas, each representing a different period in Scrooge's life. The Ghost of Christmas Present is concerned with Scrooge's current life and the present Christmas Day.[1]

The Ghost of Christmas Present is presented as a personification of the Christmas spirit,[2][3] and in the novella's first edition hand-coloured drawing by John Leech resembles early-Victorian images of Father Christmas. The spirit first appears to Scrooge on a throne made of traditional Christmas foodstuffs that would have been familiar to Dickens's more prosperous readers.[4][5]

The spirit becomes the mouthpiece for Dickens's view on social reform and Christian charity:[2][6] generosity and goodwill to all men – especially to the poor – and celebration of Christmas Day.[7]

Background Edit

 
Dickens portrait by Margaret Gillies (1843), painted during the period when he was writing A Christmas Carol.

By early 1843 Dickens had been affected by the treatment of the poor, and in particular the treatment of the children of the poor after witnessing children working in appalling conditions in a tin mine[8] and following a visit to a ragged school.[9] Indeed, Dickens himself had experienced poverty as a boy when he was forced to work in a blacking factory after his father's imprisonment for debt. Originally intending to write a political pamphlet titled, An Appeal to the People of England, on behalf of the Poor Man's Child, he changed his mind[10] and instead wrote A Christmas Carol[11] which voiced his social concerns about poverty and injustice.[12][13]

Dickens's friend and biographer John Forster said that Dickens had 'a hankering after ghosts’, while not actually having a belief in them himself, and his journals Household Words and All the Year Round regularly featured ghost stories, with the novelist publishing an annual ghost story for some years after his first, A Christmas Carol, in 1843. In this novella Dickens was innovative in making the existence of the supernatural a natural extension of the real world in which Scrooge and his contemporaries lived.[1] Dickens making the Christmas Spirits a central feature of his story is a reflection of the early-Victorian interest in the paranormal.[14]

Origins Edit

 
Engraving of Old Christmas 1842 - Illustrated London News (December 1842).

The Ghost of Christmas Present is described as “a jolly Giant” and Leech's hand-coloured illustration of the friendly and cheerful Spirit, his hand open in a gesture of welcome confronted by the amazed Scrooge has been described by Jane Rabb Cohen as elegantly combining "the ideal, real, and supernatural" with humour and sympathy.[15] It is clear that the Spirit is based on Father Christmas, the ancient patriarchal figure associated with the English Christmas holiday, traditionally a bearded pagan giant depicted in a fur-lined evergreen robe wearing a crown of holly while holding mistletoe. Father Christmas or Old Christmas, was often represented as surrounded by plentiful food and drink and started to appear regularly in illustrated magazines of the 1840s.[16]

The American Santa Claus commemorated in the 1822 poem A Visit from St. Nicholas (better known as ‘'The Night Before Christmas'’) by Clement Clarke Moore is derived from his pagan English counterpart and the gift-giving Saint Nicholas of Myra, but the Ghost of Christmas Present should not be confused with the American version, who was little known in England before the early 1850s.[3]

Significance to the story Edit

 
The Third of the Spirits - Sol Eytinge Jr. (1869).

As predicted by Jacob Marley, the second Spirit, the Ghost of Christmas Present, appears as the bell strikes one. While Scrooge is waiting to meet the second of the Spirits, ‘nothing between a baby and a rhinoceros would have astonished him very much’. However, the appearance of the Spirit takes him by surprise, with its vision of opulence and the good things of Christmas, a vision of how Scrooge with all his wealth could be living, but chooses not to:[1][17]

The moment Scrooge's hand was on the lock, a strange voice called him by his name, and bade him enter. He obeyed...

Heaped up on the floor, to form a kind of throne, were turkeys, geese, game, poultry, brawn, great joints of meat, sucking-pigs, long wreaths of sausages, mince-pies, plum-puddings, barrels of oysters, red-hot chestnuts, cherry-cheeked apples, juicy oranges, luscious pears, immense twelfth-cakes, and seething bowls of punch, that made the chamber dim with their delicious steam. In easy state upon this couch there sat a jolly Giant, glorious to see; who bore a glowing torch, in shape not unlike Plenty's horn, and held it up, high up, to shed its light on Scrooge as he came peeping round the door.

"Come in!" exclaimed the Ghost. "Come in! and know me better, man!"

Scrooge entered timidly, and hung his head before this Spirit. He was not the dogged Scrooge he had been; and, though the Spirit's eyes were clear and kind, he did not like to meet them.

"I am the Ghost of Christmas Present," said the Spirit. "Look upon me!"

Scrooge reverently did so. It was clothed in one simple deep green robe, or mantle, bordered with white fur. This garment hung so loosely on the figure, that its capacious breast was bare, as if disdaining to be warded or concealed by any artifice. Its feet, observable beneath the ample folds of the garment, were also bare; and on its head it wore no other covering than a holly wreath, set here and there with shining icicles. Its dark brown curls were long and free; free as its genial face, its sparkling eye, its open hand, its cheery voice, its unconstrained demeanour, and its joyful air. Girded round its middle was an antique scabbard; but no sword was in it, and the ancient sheath was eaten up with rust.

"You have never seen the like of me before!" exclaimed the Spirit.[18]

Scrooge is more chastened in this Spirit's company than he was in the presence of the Ghost of Christmas Past and expresses his willingness to learn from any lesson the Spirit will show him.[19] The Spirit takes Scrooge to the city streets with which Dickens himself was very familiar and which he paced each night while composing A Christmas Carol – 'past the areas of shabby genteel houses in Somers or Kentish Towns, watching the diners preparing or coming in'. Dickens incorporated these scenes into his novella.[14] In the original manuscript, the Spirit refers to “my oldest brother”, a clear reference to Jesus Christ and the first Christmas, but Dickens erased this reference before publication as being irreverent.[20]

The Spirit shows Scrooge the joys and the hardships experienced by his fellow Man during one Christmas Day, that of the present,[1] taking Scrooge to a joyous market with people buying the makings of Christmas dinner; to celebrations of Christmas in a miner's cottage, a lighthouse, and at his own nephew Fred's Christmas party. A major part of this stave is taken up with Bob Cratchit and his family, who, although poor, love each other and delight in each other's company. During the family feast we are introduced to Cratchit's youngest son, Tiny Tim, who, despite his disability remains full of Christian spirit and happiness.[21][22] The Spirit informs Scrooge that Tiny Tim will die unless the course of events changes, echoing Scrooge's own words he had earlier used to the two men who were collecting for charity, "If he be like to die, he had better do it, and decrease the surplus population."[18]

Scrooge notices that the Spirit

notwithstanding his gigantic size [is able to] accommodate himself to any place with ease ... He stood beneath a low roof quite as gracefully and like a super-natural creature, as it was possible he could have done in any lofty hall.

The Rev. Geoffrey Rowell has made the observation that the stooping of the Ghost of Christmas Present is a reflection of the New Testament's statement that God stooped down to be born in human form in the Incarnation at Bethlehem.[14]

Sabbath dinners of the poor Edit

When the Ghost of Christmas Present shows Scrooge the dinners of the poor being cooked in a local bakery, the houses of the poor at that time being ill-equipped for cooking,[23][full citation needed] seeing the Spirit as representing God and Christianity Scrooge accuses him of wanting to close such bakeries on the Sabbath which would have resulted in the poor having no hot food that day.

The topic of Sunday shuttering of businesses was of great importance to Dickens at that time: A number of public figures wanted to keep the Sabbath holy by banning secular work on Sundays, which meant closing the bakeries. Among these Sabbatarians was the MP Sir Andrew Agnew (1793–1849), who introduced a Sunday Observance Bill in the House of Commons four times between 1832 and 1837, none of which passed. It was Agnew's third attempt which drew on him the wrath of Dickens; Dickens' pamphlet in response[24] is largely a personal attack on Agnew, who wished to not only close the bakeries but also to limit other "innocent enjoyments" of the poor. The passing of the Bill, had it been successful, would not have affected the hot meals or amusements of the better-off on Sundays, however. Dickens wrote,

"Sir Andrew Agnew ... generally speaking, eat(s) pretty comfortable dinners all the week through, and cannot be expected to understand what people feel, who only have a meat dinner on one day out of seven."[24]

Dickens later supported the National Sunday League which campaigned for the further relaxation of Sunday restrictions.[25]

In the novella, Scrooge points out to the Spirit that the actions of the Sabbatarians “... has been done in your name, or at least that of your family”. This is a revealing comment, as it shows that God sent the Spirits for Scrooge's redemption, and that Dickens therefore intended A Christmas Carol as a Christian allegory. In the Gospel of Mark, the disciples of Jesus pluck the heads off grain to eat as they walked by some fields. They are accused of breaking Sabbath rules concerning resting on the Sabbath, because plucking the grain was considered food preparation. Jesus replied,

"The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath."[26]

Dickens himself professed to be a Christian, but it is hard to pigeonhole his faith into any particular sectarian branch of 19th century Christianity.[27] The Spirit responds:

There are some on this earth of yours ... who lay claim to know us, and who do their deeds of passion, pride, ill-will, hatred, envy, bigotry, and selfishness in our name, who are as strange to us and all our kith and kin, as if they had never lived. Remember that, and charge their doings on themselves, not us.[27]

The Spirit's words point out to Scrooge that many hypocritically claim religious justification for their un-Christian actions which adversely affect the lives of the poor. He states that men should be judged by the morality of their deeds and not by the religious justification for them.[28]

Ignorance and Want Edit

 
"Scrooge encounters Ignorance and Want", illustration (1843) John Leech.[17]

The Spirit grows visibly older as his time with Scrooge passes, each of the Spirits having their allotted spans,[1] but before disappearing Scrooge observes two hideous and emaciated children – Ignorance and Want[19] – crouching beneath the robe of the Spirit.

"Oh, Man! look here! Look, look, down here!" exclaimed the Ghost.

They were a boy and girl. Yellow, meagre, ragged, scowling, wolfish; but prostrate, too, in their humility.[18]

The two are intended by Dickens as a warning to Scrooge and Mankind of the consequences of ignoring the needs of the poor - and poor children in particular:

“Spirit! are they yours?” Scrooge could say no more.

“They are Man’s”, said the Spirit, looking down upon them. “And they cling to me, appealing from their fathers. This boy is Ignorance. This girl is Want. Beware them both, and all of their degree, but most of all beware this boy, for on his brow I see that written which is Doom, unless the writing be erased. Deny it!” cried the Spirit, stretching out its hand towards the city. “Slander those who tell it ye! Admit it for your factious purposes, and make it worse. And bide the end!”

“Have they no refuge or resource?” cried Scrooge.

Are there no prisons?” said the Spirit, turning on him for the last time with his own words. “Are there no workhouses?[18]

The Spirit thus reminds the reader that poverty is not a problem of the past or the future but also of the present, and mocks Scrooge's concern for their welfare before disappearing at the stroke of midnight.

Dickens was to reiterate his warning about the treatment of the poor in a speech he delivered at the Polytechnic Institute in Birmingham on 28 February 1844, shortly after the publication of A Christmas Carol. In a metaphor taken from 'The Genii in the Bottle' from The Arabian Nights he said,

"Now, there is a spirit of great power, the Spirit of Ignorance, long shut up in a vessel of Obstinate Neglect, with a great deal of lead in its composition, and sealed with the seal of many, many Solomons, and which is exactly in the same position. Release it in time, and it will bless, restore, and reanimate society; but let it lie under the rolling waves of years, and its blind revenge at last will be destruction."[29][30]

Notable portrayals Edit

Film Edit

The character does not appear in Scrooge, or, Marley's Ghost (1901), the first film version of the story.

Television Edit

Musicals Edit

Plays Edit

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ When it is not referred to as "it", it is referred to as "he".

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Mullan, John. Ghosts in A Christmas Carol, Discovering Literature: Romantics & Victorians - British Library Database
  2. ^ a b Hind-Portley, Mary Is 'A Christmas Carol' more than a ghost story?, University of Birmingham, 9 December 2020
  3. ^ a b Hearn, Michael Patrick. The Annotated Christmas Carol, W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., New York (2004), p. 83
  4. ^ Stave Three: The Second of the Three Spirits, A Christmas Carol Study Guide - Spark Notes
  5. ^ The Ghost of Christmas Present’s role in the novella, A Christmas Carol, YorkNotes Study Guide
  6. ^ Timko, M. (2013). "No Scrooge he: The Christianity of Charles Dickens", America: The Jesuit Review
  7. ^ Taft, J. (2015). "Disenchanted religion and secular enchantment in A Christmas Carol", Victorian Literature and Culture, 43(4), pp. 659–673
  8. ^ Childs & Tredell 2006, p. 92.
  9. ^ Lee, British Library.
  10. ^ Callow 2009, p. 38.
  11. ^ Ledger 2007, p. 119.
  12. ^ Sutherland, John The Origins of A Christmas Carol, British Library database (2014)
  13. ^ Priestley, Chris. Ignorance and Want: why Charles Dickens's A Christmas Carol is as relevant today as ever, The Guardian, 23 December 2015
  14. ^ a b c Rowell, Geoffrey (December 1993). "Dickens and the Construction of Christmas". History Today. Vol. 43, no. 12.
  15. ^ Cohen, Jane Rabb. "The Illustrators of the Christmas Books, John Leech." Charles Dickens and His Original Illustrators. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 1980. Pp. 141-151
  16. ^ Roud, Steve (2006). The English Year, London: Penguin Books. pp. 385–387. ISBN 978-0-140-51554-1
  17. ^ a b Leech, John (1843). The Second of The Three Spirits [or] Scrooge's third Visitor. Art. Victorian Web (illustration).
  18. ^ a b c d Dickens, Charles (1843). "Stave 3: The second of the spirits". A Christmas Carol. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  19. ^ a b "The Ghost of Christmas Present in A Christmas Carol". BBC Bitesize.
  20. ^ Hearn, p. 92
  21. ^ "Plot". A Christmas Carol. Royal Shakespeare Company.
  22. ^ "Analysis of the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present, and Yet to Come". University of Durham.
  23. ^ "[no title cited]". Notes and Queries. London, UK. 1940.
  24. ^ a b Dickens, C. as "Timothy Sparks" (1836). Sunday Under Three Heads (pamphlet).
  25. ^ Hearn, p. 93
  26. ^ The Gospel of Mark. The New Testament. Chapter 2, v. 27.
  27. ^ a b Hind-Portley, Mary (9 December 2020). "Is A Christmas Carol more than a ghost story?" (blog). University of Birmingham. In this post, Mary Hind-Portley (@Lit_Liverbird) comments on Dickens's Christmas Carol with a focus on its religious elements.
  28. ^ "Moral Responsibility". SparkNotes Online Study Guide. A Christmas Carol.
  29. ^ Hearn, p. 124
  30. ^ Forster, John (1872). The Life of Charles Dickens. Vol. 1. p. 61.

Sources Edit

ghost, christmas, present, fictional, character, charles, dickens, 1843, novella, christmas, carol, ghost, three, spirits, which, appear, miser, ebenezer, scrooge, offer, chance, redemption, christmas, carol, characterthe, ebenezer, scrooge, illustration, john. The Ghost of Christmas Present is a fictional character in Charles Dickens 1843 novella A Christmas Carol The Ghost is one of three spirits which appear to miser Ebenezer Scrooge to offer him a chance of redemption Ghost of Christmas PresentA Christmas Carol characterThe Ghost of Christmas Present and Ebenezer Scrooge illustration by John Leech 1843 Created byCharles DickensAliasSpirit of Christmas PresentGenderMale a OccupationSpirit of ChristmasRelativesGhost of Christmas Past forerunner Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come follower Following a visit from the ghost of his deceased business partner Jacob Marley Scrooge receives nocturnal visits by three Ghosts of Christmas each representing a different period in Scrooge s life The Ghost of Christmas Present is concerned with Scrooge s current life and the present Christmas Day 1 The Ghost of Christmas Present is presented as a personification of the Christmas spirit 2 3 and in the novella s first edition hand coloured drawing by John Leech resembles early Victorian images of Father Christmas The spirit first appears to Scrooge on a throne made of traditional Christmas foodstuffs that would have been familiar to Dickens s more prosperous readers 4 5 The spirit becomes the mouthpiece for Dickens s view on social reform and Christian charity 2 6 generosity and goodwill to all men especially to the poor and celebration of Christmas Day 7 Contents 1 Background 2 Origins 3 Significance to the story 3 1 Sabbath dinners of the poor 3 2 Ignorance and Want 4 Notable portrayals 4 1 Film 4 2 Television 4 3 Musicals 4 4 Plays 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 SourcesBackground Edit nbsp Dickens portrait by Margaret Gillies 1843 painted during the period when he was writing A Christmas Carol By early 1843 Dickens had been affected by the treatment of the poor and in particular the treatment of the children of the poor after witnessing children working in appalling conditions in a tin mine 8 and following a visit to a ragged school 9 Indeed Dickens himself had experienced poverty as a boy when he was forced to work in a blacking factory after his father s imprisonment for debt Originally intending to write a political pamphlet titled An Appeal to the People of England on behalf of the Poor Man s Child he changed his mind 10 and instead wrote A Christmas Carol 11 which voiced his social concerns about poverty and injustice 12 13 Dickens s friend and biographer John Forster said that Dickens had a hankering after ghosts while not actually having a belief in them himself and his journals Household Words and All the Year Round regularly featured ghost stories with the novelist publishing an annual ghost story for some years after his first A Christmas Carol in 1843 In this novella Dickens was innovative in making the existence of the supernatural a natural extension of the real world in which Scrooge and his contemporaries lived 1 Dickens making the Christmas Spirits a central feature of his story is a reflection of the early Victorian interest in the paranormal 14 Origins Edit nbsp Engraving of Old Christmas 1842 Illustrated London News December 1842 The Ghost of Christmas Present is described as a jolly Giant and Leech s hand coloured illustration of the friendly and cheerful Spirit his hand open in a gesture of welcome confronted by the amazed Scrooge has been described by Jane Rabb Cohen as elegantly combining the ideal real and supernatural with humour and sympathy 15 It is clear that the Spirit is based on Father Christmas the ancient patriarchal figure associated with the English Christmas holiday traditionally a bearded pagan giant depicted in a fur lined evergreen robe wearing a crown of holly while holding mistletoe Father Christmas or Old Christmas was often represented as surrounded by plentiful food and drink and started to appear regularly in illustrated magazines of the 1840s 16 The American Santa Claus commemorated in the 1822 poem A Visit from St Nicholas better known as The Night Before Christmas by Clement Clarke Moore is derived from his pagan English counterpart and the gift giving Saint Nicholas of Myra but the Ghost of Christmas Present should not be confused with the American version who was little known in England before the early 1850s 3 Significance to the story Edit nbsp The Third of the Spirits Sol Eytinge Jr 1869 As predicted by Jacob Marley the second Spirit the Ghost of Christmas Present appears as the bell strikes one While Scrooge is waiting to meet the second of the Spirits nothing between a baby and a rhinoceros would have astonished him very much However the appearance of the Spirit takes him by surprise with its vision of opulence and the good things of Christmas a vision of how Scrooge with all his wealth could be living but chooses not to 1 17 The moment Scrooge s hand was on the lock a strange voice called him by his name and bade him enter He obeyed Heaped up on the floor to form a kind of throne were turkeys geese game poultry brawn great joints of meat sucking pigs long wreaths of sausages mince pies plum puddings barrels of oysters red hot chestnuts cherry cheeked apples juicy oranges luscious pears immense twelfth cakes and seething bowls of punch that made the chamber dim with their delicious steam In easy state upon this couch there sat a jolly Giant glorious to see who bore a glowing torch in shape not unlike Plenty s horn and held it up high up to shed its light on Scrooge as he came peeping round the door Come in exclaimed the Ghost Come in and know me better man Scrooge entered timidly and hung his head before this Spirit He was not the dogged Scrooge he had been and though the Spirit s eyes were clear and kind he did not like to meet them I am the Ghost of Christmas Present said the Spirit Look upon me Scrooge reverently did so It was clothed in one simple deep green robe or mantle bordered with white fur This garment hung so loosely on the figure that its capacious breast was bare as if disdaining to be warded or concealed by any artifice Its feet observable beneath the ample folds of the garment were also bare and on its head it wore no other covering than a holly wreath set here and there with shining icicles Its dark brown curls were long and free free as its genial face its sparkling eye its open hand its cheery voice its unconstrained demeanour and its joyful air Girded round its middle was an antique scabbard but no sword was in it and the ancient sheath was eaten up with rust You have never seen the like of me before exclaimed the Spirit 18 Scrooge is more chastened in this Spirit s company than he was in the presence of the Ghost of Christmas Past and expresses his willingness to learn from any lesson the Spirit will show him 19 The Spirit takes Scrooge to the city streets with which Dickens himself was very familiar and which he paced each night while composing A Christmas Carol past the areas of shabby genteel houses in Somers or Kentish Towns watching the diners preparing or coming in Dickens incorporated these scenes into his novella 14 In the original manuscript the Spirit refers to my oldest brother a clear reference to Jesus Christ and the first Christmas but Dickens erased this reference before publication as being irreverent 20 The Spirit shows Scrooge the joys and the hardships experienced by his fellow Man during one Christmas Day that of the present 1 taking Scrooge to a joyous market with people buying the makings of Christmas dinner to celebrations of Christmas in a miner s cottage a lighthouse and at his own nephew Fred s Christmas party A major part of this stave is taken up with Bob Cratchit and his family who although poor love each other and delight in each other s company During the family feast we are introduced to Cratchit s youngest son Tiny Tim who despite his disability remains full of Christian spirit and happiness 21 22 The Spirit informs Scrooge that Tiny Tim will die unless the course of events changes echoing Scrooge s own words he had earlier used to the two men who were collecting for charity If he be like to die he had better do it and decrease the surplus population 18 Scrooge notices that the Spirit notwithstanding his gigantic size is able to accommodate himself to any place with ease He stood beneath a low roof quite as gracefully and like a super natural creature as it was possible he could have done in any lofty hall The Rev Geoffrey Rowell has made the observation that the stooping of the Ghost of Christmas Present is a reflection of the New Testament s statement that God stooped down to be born in human form in the Incarnation at Bethlehem 14 Sabbath dinners of the poor Edit When the Ghost of Christmas Present shows Scrooge the dinners of the poor being cooked in a local bakery the houses of the poor at that time being ill equipped for cooking 23 full citation needed seeing the Spirit as representing God and Christianity Scrooge accuses him of wanting to close such bakeries on the Sabbath which would have resulted in the poor having no hot food that day The topic of Sunday shuttering of businesses was of great importance to Dickens at that time A number of public figures wanted to keep the Sabbath holy by banning secular work on Sundays which meant closing the bakeries Among these Sabbatarians was the MP Sir Andrew Agnew 1793 1849 who introduced a Sunday Observance Bill in the House of Commons four times between 1832 and 1837 none of which passed It was Agnew s third attempt which drew on him the wrath of Dickens Dickens pamphlet in response 24 is largely a personal attack on Agnew who wished to not only close the bakeries but also to limit other innocent enjoyments of the poor The passing of the Bill had it been successful would not have affected the hot meals or amusements of the better off on Sundays however Dickens wrote Sir Andrew Agnew generally speaking eat s pretty comfortable dinners all the week through and cannot be expected to understand what people feel who only have a meat dinner on one day out of seven 24 Dickens later supported the National Sunday League which campaigned for the further relaxation of Sunday restrictions 25 In the novella Scrooge points out to the Spirit that the actions of the Sabbatarians has been done in your name or at least that of your family This is a revealing comment as it shows that God sent the Spirits for Scrooge s redemption and that Dickens therefore intended A Christmas Carol as a Christian allegory In the Gospel of Mark the disciples of Jesus pluck the heads off grain to eat as they walked by some fields They are accused of breaking Sabbath rules concerning resting on the Sabbath because plucking the grain was considered food preparation Jesus replied The Sabbath was made for man not man for the Sabbath 26 Dickens himself professed to be a Christian but it is hard to pigeonhole his faith into any particular sectarian branch of 19th century Christianity 27 The Spirit responds There are some on this earth of yours who lay claim to know us and who do their deeds of passion pride ill will hatred envy bigotry and selfishness in our name who are as strange to us and all our kith and kin as if they had never lived Remember that and charge their doings on themselves not us 27 The Spirit s words point out to Scrooge that many hypocritically claim religious justification for their un Christian actions which adversely affect the lives of the poor He states that men should be judged by the morality of their deeds and not by the religious justification for them 28 Ignorance and Want Edit nbsp Scrooge encounters Ignorance and Want illustration 1843 John Leech 17 The Spirit grows visibly older as his time with Scrooge passes each of the Spirits having their allotted spans 1 but before disappearing Scrooge observes two hideous and emaciated children Ignorance and Want 19 crouching beneath the robe of the Spirit Oh Man look here Look look down here exclaimed the Ghost They were a boy and girl Yellow meagre ragged scowling wolfish but prostrate too in their humility 18 The two are intended by Dickens as a warning to Scrooge and Mankind of the consequences of ignoring the needs of the poor and poor children in particular Spirit are they yours Scrooge could say no more They are Man s said the Spirit looking down upon them And they cling to me appealing from their fathers This boy is Ignorance This girl is Want Beware them both and all of their degree but most of all beware this boy for on his brow I see that written which is Doom unless the writing be erased Deny it cried the Spirit stretching out its hand towards the city Slander those who tell it ye Admit it for your factious purposes and make it worse And bide the end Have they no refuge or resource cried Scrooge Are there no prisons said the Spirit turning on him for the last time with his own words Are there no workhouses 18 The Spirit thus reminds the reader that poverty is not a problem of the past or the future but also of the present and mocks Scrooge s concern for their welfare before disappearing at the stroke of midnight Dickens was to reiterate his warning about the treatment of the poor in a speech he delivered at the Polytechnic Institute in Birmingham on 28 February 1844 shortly after the publication of A Christmas Carol In a metaphor taken from The Genii in the Bottle from The Arabian Nights he said Now there is a spirit of great power the Spirit of Ignorance long shut up in a vessel of Obstinate Neglect with a great deal of lead in its composition and sealed with the seal of many many Solomons and which is exactly in the same position Release it in time and it will bless restore and reanimate society but let it lie under the rolling waves of years and its blind revenge at last will be destruction 29 30 Notable portrayals EditFilm Edit The character does not appear in Scrooge or Marley s Ghost 1901 the first film version of the story Richard L Estrange in The Right to Be Happy 1916 Oscar Asche in Scrooge 1935 Lionel Braham in A Christmas Carol 1938 Francis de Wolff in Scrooge 1951 Kenneth More in Scrooge 1970 Felix Felton voice in A Christmas Carol 1971 Will Ryan Willie the Giant in Mickey s Christmas Carol 1983 Carol Kane in Scrooged 1988 Jerry Nelson face and voice in The Muppet Christmas Carol 1992 Whoopi Goldberg voice in A Christmas Carol 1997 Michael Gambon voice in Christmas Carol The Movie 2001 Keith Wickham voice in A Christmas Carol 2006 Jim Carrey voice and motion capture in A Christmas Carol 2009 Justin Edwards in The Man Who Invented Christmas 2017 Daniel Kaluuya in A Christmas Carol 2020 Will Ferrell in Spirited 2022 Trevor Dion Nicholas voice in Scrooge A Christmas Carol Television Edit Les Tremayne voice in Mister Magoo s Christmas Carol 1962 Paul Frees voice in The Stingiest Man in Town 1978 Edward Woodward in A Christmas Carol 1984 Brian Cummings voice in A Flintstones Christmas Carol 1994 Desmond Barrit in A Christmas Carol 1999 Ray Fearon in A Christmas Carol 2000 David Tennant in Nan s Christmas Carol 2009 Karen Gillan in the Doctor Who episode A Christmas Carol 2010 Andrea Libman in My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic episode A Hearth s Warming Tail 2016 Charlotte Riley in A Christmas Carol 2019 Musicals Edit Stratford Johns in Scrooge 1992 Ken Jennings in A Christmas Carol 1994 Plays Edit Paul Bedford in A Christmas Carol or Past Present and Future 1844 Patrick Stewart all characters in A Christmas Carol 1991 Golda Rosheuvel Nichola Hughes Gloria Onitiri Golda Rosheuvel LaChanze in A Christmas Carol 2017 2021 See also EditJacob Marley Ghost of Christmas Past Ghost of Christmas Yet to ComeNotes Edit When it is not referred to as it it is referred to as he References Edit a b c d e Mullan John Ghosts in A Christmas Carol Discovering Literature Romantics amp Victorians British Library Database a b Hind Portley Mary Is A Christmas Carol more than a ghost story University of Birmingham 9 December 2020 a b Hearn Michael Patrick The Annotated Christmas Carol W W Norton amp Company Inc New York 2004 p 83 Stave Three The Second of the Three Spirits A Christmas Carol Study Guide Spark Notes The Ghost of Christmas Present s role in the novella A Christmas Carol YorkNotes Study Guide Timko M 2013 No Scrooge he The Christianity of Charles Dickens America The Jesuit Review Taft J 2015 Disenchanted religion and secular enchantment in A Christmas Carol Victorian Literature and Culture 43 4 pp 659 673 Childs amp Tredell 2006 p 92 Lee British Library Callow 2009 p 38 Ledger 2007 p 119 Sutherland John The Origins of A Christmas Carol British Library database 2014 Priestley Chris Ignorance and Want why Charles Dickens s A Christmas Carol is as relevant today as ever The Guardian 23 December 2015 a b c Rowell Geoffrey December 1993 Dickens and the Construction of Christmas History Today Vol 43 no 12 Cohen Jane Rabb The Illustrators of the Christmas Books John Leech Charles Dickens and His Original Illustrators Columbus Ohio State University Press 1980 Pp 141 151 Roud Steve 2006 The English Year London Penguin Books pp 385 387 ISBN 978 0 140 51554 1 a b Leech John 1843 The Second of The Three Spirits or Scrooge s third Visitor Art Victorian Web illustration a b c d Dickens Charles 1843 Stave 3 The second of the spirits A Christmas Carol a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help a b The Ghost of Christmas Present in A Christmas Carol BBC Bitesize Hearn p 92 Plot A Christmas Carol Royal Shakespeare Company Analysis of the Ghosts of Christmas Past Present and Yet to Come University of Durham no title cited Notes and Queries London UK 1940 a b Dickens C as Timothy Sparks 1836 Sunday Under Three Heads pamphlet Hearn p 93 The Gospel of Mark The New Testament Chapter 2 v 27 a b Hind Portley Mary 9 December 2020 Is A Christmas Carol more than a ghost story blog University of Birmingham In this post Mary Hind Portley Lit Liverbird comments on Dickens s Christmas Carol with a focus on its religious elements Moral Responsibility SparkNotes Online Study Guide A Christmas Carol Hearn p 124 Forster John 1872 The Life of Charles Dickens Vol 1 p 61 Sources EditAckroyd Peter 1990 Dickens London Sinclair Stevenson ISBN 978 1 85619 000 8 Callow Simon 2009 Dickens Christmas A Victorian Celebration London Frances Lincoln ISBN 978 0 7112 3031 6 Childs Peter Tredell Nicolas 2006 Charles Dickens Basingstoke Hampshire Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 4039 1919 9 Ledger Sally 2007 Dickens and the Popular Radical Imagination Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 84577 9 Lee Imogen Ragged Schools British Library Retrieved 8 January 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ghost of Christmas Present amp oldid 1172571839, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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